Financial ServicesBofI plans debt-for-equity swap for junior bondholdersBy UNA McCAFFREY and SIMON CARSWELL
IrelandCapture sustains Serbian progress on EU statusBy Arthur Beesley, European Correspondent and in Brussels
EducationDespite the woeful state of the domestic economy, the innovation economy is building steadilyBy Chris Horn
BusinessZuckerberg tells G8 summit not to get tangled up in the webBy STANLEY PIGNAL in Deauville and and TIM BRADSHAW in London
TechnologyIbec's tech industry group chief reveals vision of Ireland as place to do businessBy JOHN COLLINS
IrelandBishop praises 'courage' of President and QueenBy Patsy McGarry and Religious Affairs Correspondent
IrelandVHI customers now face €50 fee for switching mid-contractBy EITHNE DONNELLAN and Health Correspondent
IrelandBruton on collision course with Labour backbenchers over payBy Harry McGee and MARTIN WALL and DEAGLÁN de BRÉADÚN
EconomyIcelandic minister says they handled crisis correctlyBy Harry McGee and Political Correspondent
IrelandOff-duty garda who assaulted man jailed for six monthsBy Barry Roche and Southern Correspondent
EconomyBig rise in number of European firms claiming unfair treatment by ChinaBy CLIFFORD COONAN in Beijing
IrelandWar crimes fugitive Mladic faces extradition hearingBy DANIEL McLAUGHLIN in Budapest, ARTHUR BEESLEY in Brussels and and RUADHAN Mac CORMAIC in Deauville
Technology€24m in funding for research in telecommunications announcedBy Barry Roche and Southern Correspondent
Financial ServicesForeign-owned banks count cost of carnage caused at their Irish branchesBy Simon Carswell and Finance Correspondent
Financial ServicesAIB reach deal with Minister to acquire EBS for €1By Simon Carswell and Finance Correspondent
IrelandBritain says Sellafield plant will be stress testedBy Arthur Beesley and European Correspondent
ScienceMathematics is universal and ubiquitous. But as with most foreign languages, we tend not to speak it very wellBy Dick Ahlstrom
IrelandLong list of accusations includes genocide and crimes against humanityBy MARK TRAN and EWEN MacASKILL
IrelandFor unions, Bruton's reforms will slash wages and may be straw that breaks camel's backBy Martin Wall